"Affirmative."
Colonel Ishida closed his fieldcomm and relaxed in his chair. He really shouldn"t become involved in this situation, but he feared that no one else on the planet was going to confront these people with the cold reality of frontier security procedures. Toman sympathized with Rokoyan, however. The decision to fire would be hard for anyone except a battle-hardened veteran. Rokoyan probably never killed anyone in his life, and the first time was always the most difficult, especially when they weren"t firing back.
Kaethan entered the lobby just as Serina was exiting the elevator. Her face lit up with a smile as she saw him, but something was obviously troubling her. Serina"s hug was light and quick, with her wet hair only getting his pale green shirt damp on the shoulder.
"Hi, Kaethan." Serina"s greeting lacked her usual s.p.u.n.k.
"What"s wrong, Serina? Did father get called away again?"
It seemed like a good guess to Kaethan.
"No, he"s downstairs," she glanced back at the elevator, "but something is wrong. He"s been on the phone constantly talking to his Bolos. Do you know of anything going on?"
Kaethan shook his head. "No." He shrugged. "Angelrath has the sector on alert, but that"s usual after another one of those probes is caught sneaking around."
The alerts never caused any concerns with the DDF formations. Only the planetary defenses at Blackstone Ridge ever cared much about them. At no time in Dela.s.sian history had the DDF ever "really" been on alert.
"Did father meet Kuro?" Kaethan changed the subject.
"Oh, sure. He didn"t swim with her, though. Maybe you both can tomorrow."
"Well," Kaethan"s voice took an edge to it, "I found out this morning that I certainly have the time for it."
Serina smiled, but before she could say anything the elevator doors slid open and their father walked out. The colonel did indeed look nervous, but Kaethan could see no difference to how he usually looked when the two were together. His smile, as always, seemed forced.
"Hi, Son," he said as he approached and extended his hand. "Captain," he then corrected.
"Hi, Father," Kaethan replied simply and they shook hands briefly. The thought of kidding his father about still being a colonel crossed his mind, but was instantly rejected for obvious reasons. He had been planning a witty remark about coming to the inst.i.tute to recruit marine mammals, but suddenly it didn"t seem as witty as it had in the car.
The result, of course, was a moment of uncomfortable silence.
But it was just a moment before Serina jumped in.
"Are you two hungry?"
"Yes," they both said at the same time.
Their father"s fieldcomm beeped suddenly, causing his hand to shoot for his belt in response. The colonel was suddenly embarra.s.sed by this, however, and his face turned apologetic.
"Sorry, but something serious might be happening."
Serina and Kaethan both nodded, understanding, and let their father retreat a few steps from them.
"Who have you got?" they heard him say into his phone. Then, "Blessed mother . . . uh . . . what"s happening now?"
Kaethan"s interest peaked at this. Not only did it sound like something militarily important was occurring somewhere around Delas, but his father may have almost showed an unprecedented display of emotion. Either would be a first.
"Any ideas?" Serina asked him quietly.
"None."
His father was pacing now, listening intently. Kaethan and Serina waited patiently. A couple students came through the front doors at this time, but paid them little attention. But as the doors were closing, a sharp crack of distant thunder echoed through them into the lobby.
"I hope that it doesn"t rain," Serina complained.
"I don"t think that was lightning." Kaethan now started growing nervous.
Their father stopped in his tracks and peered outside the gla.s.s doors, though nothing but the parking lot could be seen.
"A warning shot?" The colonel growled, obviously not happy with the half-measure. "Any reaction?"
"Blackstone just fired their h.e.l.lbore," Kaethan enlightened his sister. "And if we heard that all the way down here, then that means that their target is already in the atmosphere, and nearby."
Their father had not returned to his pacing, instead he just stood there staring blankly outside, tapping his foot.
"d.a.m.n!" Their father yelled suddenly. It was the kind of exclamation that someone might sound if an opposing team just scored a last second touchdown to win a game. "Lock on and ask Blackstone for permission to fire!"
The target must have dropped below Blackstone"s horizon, Kaethan surmised.
"What do you mean "nearby"?" Serina asked.
"Overhead, probably." Kaethan shook his head in dismay.
"I"m going to look outside," Serina said in a rush and ran outside.
Kaethan, however, much preferred to hear this conversation occurring, even though he was getting only one side of it. A ship must be entering the atmosphere with unknown credentials. Most likely it was on approach pattern to Reims, which often pa.s.sed right over them. Aliens, perhaps? Smugglers? Pirates? His mind ran wild with the possibilities.
His father was silent for a long time, though Kaethan couldn"t tell whether he was listening to anything. At one point, however, his father"s focus shifted over to him and their eyes met. It was a strange moment, where Toman shook his head and rolled his eyes in exasperation. Kaethan felt oddly close to his father at that moment for some reason.
Then his sister barged back in.
"I saw something big," she announced. "A transport, I think. Looked like it was heading for Reims. Too many clouds to see it for long."
His father paid attention to that, but then suddenly turned away as someone must have been saying something again on his fieldcomm.
"Clean up an Isis and ready it," the colonel then said coldly. "Ask Blackstone for clearance."
Kaethan knew what an "Isis" was, and his stomach dropped. His father"s Bolos were just ordered to ready a nuke for launch. He and his mother had often read the colonel"s letters together, and he learned much of the current equipment and lingo from them. To "clean" it, he knew, meant to reconfigure it for reduced fallout. Even with that, however, Kaethan doubted that Blackstone Ridge would clear it. Unless things got desperate, there was no way that Delas would use a nuke within the atmosphere.
Serina now decided that this was a good time to sit down, and dropped down on a big chair that was nearby. Kaethan remained standing.
"Where"s it heading?" Was his father"s next question.
The colonel then started looking frantically around the lobby, searching for something that he was obviously not finding.
"Did-" His father cut short, stopping his search, "Yeah, I was expecting that. Battle Reflex Mode. Track it as best you can and keep trying to get hold of Rokoyan."
His father closed his fieldcomm with a crack of metal against metal.
"Are we being invaded?" Serina was first to speak.
"Looks like it, Serina," Toman said sadly, looking at his children. "Son, their transport is setting down somewhere between here and Reims. They just took out your arrays and will probably bring down everything else along with it. Best you mobilize your battalion and hit them as hard and as fast as possible. You can"t let them dig in."
"Just one transport?" Kaethan wondered.
"Just one for now, but I certainly expect more."
"What about Chains and Quarter?"
"I can"t deploy them yet." The colonel shook his head. "With only one turret defending this planet, I don"t want my Bolos caught flatfooted in rough terrain when a warship squadron enters...o...b..t."
"What should I do?" Serina asked helplessly from her chair.
Kaethan could see his father mentally shift gears as his expression softened. He feared his father would just say something comforting and unhelpful that Serina would hate. Instead, he gave Serina something to do.
"You should probably call Peter to get back here, and warn people what"s going on. Tell everyone to stay off the highways as much as possible and stay home."
"I should get going." Kaethan announced then. "Will you be heading back up to Starveil?"
His father shook his head.
"No. I"ll be staying where the action is. I need to see what we"re up against."
Kaethan"s DDF issue handphone chose that moment start squealing horribly. The captain fumbled to turn it off as Serina winced against the noise.
"That"s my call. Wish me luck."
Before Kaethan could go, though, Serina jumped up from chair and caught him in a big hug. The captain returned it as best he could, then pulled away.
"Don"t get hurt," Serina ordered as she let go.
"Good luck," his father told him.
Kaethan motioned a cursory salute to his father as he pushed open the doors into the hot, moist outside air. He half walked, half jogged to his vehicle, pa.s.sing blissfully unaware students along the way. The captain had never led troops into actual combat before, of course, and countless questions hounded him now. Had he treated their exercises too much like a game before, he wondered? How would his battalion react now that it was real? Strangely enough, though, it was excitement, not fear, that was filling him. That was likely to change, Kaethan knew, once the sh.e.l.ls started flying. But until then, this was the emotion that the captain wanted his troops to tap from him.
That and confidence, of course.
But with his father on the planet, he suddenly worried about the latter.
Our Commander has finally spoken with General Rokoyan of the Dela.s.sian Defense Command. Much of the conversation was spoken with voices raised many decibels higher than what is normal for effective dialogue. There are many differences of opinion on what strategy to take in eliminating this incursion, aggravated by questions of authority between the DDC and the Concordiat. As the planetary ground forces mobilize, the 39th holds ground on the flat plains south of Starveil. Our Commander grows impatient for a strike to their beachhead, but his plan to dedicate Unit DBQ to this attack was withdrawn when we were finally allowed full access to the DDC sensor net.
The planet Delas is surrounded.
Although the orbital arrays have been eliminated, ground-based pa.s.sive detectors scattered over the Dela.s.sian surface continue to monitor glimmers of fusion drives maneuvering into position around the planet. For now they wait outside the range of my active scans, but a rush is obviously being organized to test our defenses. Every quarter of Delas" Northern and Southern Hemispheres are being threatened, along with both poles. Against a well-defended planet, this would be a foolish and disastrous plan, allowing all defenses to be utilized against the a.s.sault. But our enemy obviously does not mind wasting lives and material against us while their previous insertion no doubt catalogs our every response.
And unfortunately they will find our response to be limited. Unless our Commander"s plan fools them, our enemy will know that the far side of the planet is completely undefended. Their strategies displayed so far indicate an 80.31 percent chance that a large invasion force awaits the result of this attack. Unit DBQ and myself must do our best to discourage our enemy from deploying it.
"All is ready, Is-kaldai." The projected visage of Irriessa filled the rear wall of Keertra"s command chambers. His hood was extended in exhilaration. "These aliens bestowed upon us a gift when they fired their energy cannon at your ship. Removing it now should be a simple matter."
As Keertra had hoped, the Ad-akradai"s vehemence against him had dissipated now that combat had begun. Getting Riffen"s most loyal commander to trust him, though, would still be a great challenge.
"Indeed, Ad-akradai," Keertra replied gloriously. "And it fired at such range that I dare believe that it may be the only protection that this outpost maintains! Would it not shock our timid Council if we were to take this planet ourselves!"
"Split between our factions equally, of course."
"Of course, Irriessa," he said with as amused an expression as he could present. "The Council would accept nothing less."
For a moment, Keertra could see his rival"s commander lose himself in the promise of such glory. His ice-blue eyes became unfocused, and his hood expanded to its full size. The blood vessels that branched out within bulged prominently with a noticeable pulse.
But then the commander"s military experience returned in a flash. He suddenly looked at Keertra in defiance.
"We should not talk about these things before the battle is won, and our enemy lie dead at our feet." Irriessa scolded Keertra, and perhaps himself.
"You are right, Irriessa. They may yet surprise us. Will your warship captains now follow my commands?
"They will, Is-kaldai. We should begin immediately."
"I will give the order."
"Is-kaldai . . ." Irriessa delayed, for what he was about to say was difficult. "I was wrong to doubt Khoriss" mission. I listen to your orders now with greater respect."
"Thank you, Irriessa. I"m sure we will learn much from each other before this is over."
"Perhaps."
The communication channel closed as Irriessa shut his eyes in respect. Keertra sat back in his chair, relishing the victories that he was winning, on the planet and here also. If indeed these aliens were as weak as they seemed, then he might just have to expand his plans. Becoming Mor-verridai could be meaningless if the remaining Is-kaldai were to claim vast new tracts of alien territory and resources, without suffering disabling casualties in the process. It would be better, he mused, if these aliens were a bit tougher. Just enough to keep the remaining Is-kaldai occupied while he eliminated the entire royal family, and its lineage, back home.
This goal had been his obsession ever since the Council began serious discussions on attacking this world. Keertra had realized from the beginning that a war of this scale could not have a committee directing it. There must be an overall commander, and historically this was the Mor-verridai. Yet, this was not a possibility considering the depths that their ruling clan had fallen to. They had squandered all their riches, uncaring for centuries, while the Council methodically stripped them of their powers. Now they had become corrupt in their misery, so much so that even the Avocrahn, the fanatic warrior clan sworn to protect the Mor-verridai, were openly rebellious. And they were the key that Keertra hoped to exploit. Although he would lose a great deal in this raid, he believed that if his many surias struck swiftly and cleanly against the Mor-verridai, the Avocrahn would gladly swear loyalty to him at a time when the Kezdai needed a strong leader so desperately.
It was a goal that every day seemed nearer to his grasp. Soon, now, many operatives had to be put in motion. But he couldn"t waste time planning for them yet, not until this a.s.sault was completed. Irriessa was correct. These aliens might yet have some blades hidden beneath their cloaks.
As Captain Kaethan Ishida sped his vehicle up to the underground bunkers of the Alabaster Coast Heavy Armor, he was pleased to see that most of his personnel had already arrived. Many of the huge steel doors that led into the bunkers had been lowered, revealing the forward hulls of the Templar Mark XIs that were housed within. The roaring of their gigantic turbines was making the ground vibrate as he stepped out of his vehicle.
Ten nuclear-safe bunkers housed thirty Templars of the Alabaster Coast Heavy Armor, five bunkers on each side of what was called Armor Alley. Twenty-meter wide ramps led down to the three-inch thick steel doors that rose up out of the ground to seal the Templars inside. The doors could be lowered quickly when danger threatened, or just dropped if the base lost power. A large sign at the entrance of Armor Alley presented in large letters the full designation of this unit: Alabaster Coast Heavy Armor, Alabaster Guard, Telville Corps.
Fort Hilliard was home to the Alabaster Guard, which was comprised of several battalions and lesser formations, formed from the population south of Telville. To the east of Telville was Fort Riley and the Chandoine Guard. And to the north was Fort Owen and the Tigris Guard. Most city-states on Delas were organized this way, with all forts kept in compet.i.tion with each other for honors, and therefore a bigger slice of the defense spending for the next year. It was just the kind of arrangement that you"d expect from a corporate run government, but in fact, Kaethan thought it was quite effective. Not only were the forts always striving for more honors, but a definite sense of regiment was inspired throughout the militias.
Of course, combined exercises were sometimes a problem.
The composition of the Alabaster Guard had not changed since Candlelith purchased the last of their antiquated 150-ton Saladin Medium Tanks four years ago. Their main strike arm now consisted of Kaethan"s battalion of Templars, and three brigades of mechanized infantry in armed Haulers. Preceding them into combat were three recon companies driving armed Haulers and four weakly armored grav-cars. Twelve companies of various caliber artillery provided battalion and regimental level support to their formations. And protecting against air infiltration, and providing emergency anti-armor fire, were four TurboFalcon missile batteries and two ion-bolt defense towers that Telsteel Industries donated to the Telville Corps from their private stocks.